Title: Population Ecology
1Population Ecology
2Objectives
- 5.3.1 Outline how population size is affected
by natality, immigration, mortality, and
emigration. -
- 5.3.2 Draw and label a graph showing a sigmoid
(S- shaped) population growth curve. -
- G.1.3 Describe one method of random sampling
based on quadrat methods that is used to
compare the population size of two plant or two
animal species. -
- G.1.4 Outline the use of a transect to
correlate the distribution of plant or animal
species with an abiotic variable.
3Characteristics of Populations
- A population is a group of individuals of a
single species that simultaneously occupy the
same general area. Characteristics of populations
are shaped by the interactions between
individuals and their environment. -
- Populations have size and
- geographic boundaries.
- Density is the number of
- individuals per unit area.
- Dispersion is the pattern
- of spacing among
- individuals within
- geographic boundaries.
Darker color greater density
4Patterns of dispersion
- Dispersion patterns depend on variable population
densities. Dispersion and density both depend on
resource distribution. - Random dispersion, individual positions are
independent. - Uniform dispersion individuals are evenly
spaced. - Clumped dispersion individuals aggregate in
patches.
Random
Uniform Clumped
5Random sampling
- Measuring population density is a difficult task.
Do you -
- Count individuals - often impractical if
individuals do not want to cooperate, or - Use sampling techniques to estimate numbers.
- The mark-recapture method Individuals are
trapped,
marked with a tag, recorded, then
released and captured a second time. The
percentage recaptured gives an estimate of the
true population. - Quadrat methods count all individuals within a
pre- cisely outlined area, then extrapolate to
the larger environment. ? an estimate.
6Quadrat sampling techniques
- A quadrat is a square of a convenient size,
perhaps 1 m x 1 m, in which species of interest
are counted. - Later relate totals to the area of interest
perhaps an entire forest. -
Counting rule Omit objects on the left
and bottom edges.
7Quadrat sampling techniques
8Demography
- Demography is the study of factors that affect
the growth and decline of populations. - Additions occur through
- birth (natality) and im-
- migration subtractions
- occur through death
- (mortality) emigration.
Population Growth by County April, 2000, to
July, 2003
9Demography
- Represent a life table
data with a
survivorship
curve which plots
the
number of indi-
viduals in a cohort
still alive at each age. - Type I curve shows
a low death
rate early in life (humans). - Type II curve shows constant mortality
(squirrels). - Type III curve shows high death rate early in
life (oyster).
10Population Growth (ideal conditions)
- Exponential growth increases faster and faster
un-checked, like compound interest, because
resources are unlimited. Growth becomes faster
and faster. -
-
- Change in population size Births -
Deaths - This model is best for single-celled life
(bacteria). -
a J-shaped curve
11Population Growth (ideal conditions)
- No population can in-
crease forever! Why? -
- It eventually runs out of
resources - too little food,
- too little space,
- too many waste products,
- too many predators,
- too much disease.
12Population Growth (typical conditions)
- The logistic growth model shows a leveling-off
because of environmental feedback. The carrying
capacity (K) is the maximum population size that
can be supported by available resources. - Typically, unlimited resources
are rare, so this graph is
S-shaped. -
13Population Growth
- Stages of growth
- a) Lag phase growth is slow as 1?2, then 2?4,
4?8, etc. - b) Exponential phase eventually growth speeds
up as 1 million ? 2 million, etc. - c) Transitional phase at some point the
food begins to run out, and
the growth slows down. - d) Plateau phase carrying capacity has
been reached, and births equal
deaths.
14Population Growth
- The logistic growth model does not fit all
situations! - Resource availability depends on the situation.
- Natural selection can vary with density
environment. - There are lag times that alter the S-curve.
Populations can grow large, then many may starve
(birds, below).
Microbes in the lab fit the model well.
Higher organisms in nature are influenced by
many factors.
15Population-limiting Factors
- Why do all populations eventually stop growing?
- What environmental factors stop a population from
growing? - Examine effects of increased population density.
16Population-limiting Factors
- Density-independent factors act the same
regard-less of population size. -
- Natural disasters such as hurricanes, tsunamis,
forest fires destroy all but the lucky
individuals in large or small populations.
17Population-limiting Factors
- Density-dependent factors (negative feedback)
increase their effect on populations as
population density increases. -
- Negative feedback prevents unlim-
ited population
growth. - Intra-specific competition for food, shelter,
or mates can cause density-dependent
behavior of populations. - Resource limitation in crowded populations
can stop growth population by reducing
reproduction.
18Population-limiting Factors
- Negative feedback prevents unlimited population
growth. - Territoriality (defense of a space) may set a
limit on density. - Predation may cause mortality of prey species.
- Waste accumulation can regulate population size.
- Ex yeast make alco- hol during
ferment- ation of grape juice to wine,
but yeast begin to die as alcohol
content approaches 13. -
- Disease spreads much
- more rapidly in dense
- populations.
19Population-limiting factors
- Some populations have regular boom-and-bust
cycles. - Lynx hare populations in Alaska cycle on a
10-year basis. - More hares allow more baby lynxes to survive
reproduce - More lynxes eat more hares, then lynx population
crashes. - Fewer lynxes allow more hares to survive - cycle
repeats.
20Over-population
- The human population has been growing almost
exponen-tially for three centuries but cannot do
so indefinitely. - What might put a stop to this
growth?
21An apocalypse?
Conquest, War, Famine, Disease